Brown v. State

Decision Date03 July 1911
Docket Number15285
Citation55 So. 961,99 Miss. 719
CourtMississippi Supreme Court
PartiesALBERT BROWN v. STATE

APPEAL from the circuit court of Lee county, HON. JNO. H. MITCHELL Judge.

Albert Brown was convicted of manslaughter and appeals.

The facts are fully stated in the opinion of the court.

Affirmed.

Clayton Mitchell & Clayton, Boggan & Leake and C. P. Long, for appellant.

It was error for the court to exclude the testimony of O. T. Trapp sheriff, and Norbin Jones, chancery clerk of Lee county, to whom Henry Brown had confessed that he was the guilty party and not the appellant. The confession and the testimony of the sheriff is in the record, but was not given in the presence of the jury. It shows that Henry Brown had seen his brother suffer for his wrong as long as he could, and that he voluntarily came to the sheriff and gave himself up as the true culprit. He stated at the time that the appellant was innocent and was not even present at the time of the killing.

The testimony in this case, we submit points equally to the guilt of Henry Brown as to that of the appellant, and this fact makes the action of the court in excluding this testimony grave error, with all the testimony indicating the guilt of Henry Brown to a great extent, then for the court to refuse to permit the appellant to prove to the jury that Henry had not only confessed that he was the guilty party, but had spent several months in jail awaiting the indictment by a grand jury and a conviction by a petit jury, and a death upon the gallows, or a felon's cell in the penitentiary; we submit to refuse this to the defendant as denying him a fair and an impartial trial.

If in this case, the testimony offered was incompetent, then, if Henry Brown had been tried and convicted of this offense and had been sentenced to death, and while on the gallows had made a confession, and admitted his guilt and completely exonerated the appellant in the matter, then it would have been incompetent for the defense to have proven this confession made under such circumstances, in a trial for his own life on the same charge. This would shock the feelings of a barbarian. Such procedure would not be tolerated even in Italy in the trial of the Camorrat.

Yet some American courts have held this kind of testimony incompetent. But when the cases are carefully considered, it will be found, in almost all of them, that the presence of the party making the confession was unaccounted for. This will be found to be true in the following cases in which the confession was excluded, to-wit: Welsh v. State (Ala.), 11 So. 560; Lowery v. State (Ga.), 28 S.E. 419; State v. Young (La.), 31. So. 993; Farrell v. Watz (Mass.), 35 N.E. 783; Smith v State, 9 Ala. 995.

In the last case cited, Mr. Justice Goldwaite delivered a dissenting opinion in which he said, "When the other facts and circumstances connect the party with the act, and the confession is made under circumstances which repel the suspicion of any motive, I can see no reason why a doubtful crime may not thus be fixed on the confessing party, though the fact of that confession may tend to exculpate another, to whom the circumstances equally point as the guilty person." Smith v. State, 9 Ala. 995.

This case is very much like the case at bar, in that the circumstances point to the guilt of either party equally.

In the case of Coleman v. Frazier, 4 Rich. L. 152, Oneal Justice, said: "The admission of such testimony arises from necessity, and the certainty that it is true from the want of motive to falsify. . . . Here we have every guaranty of its truthfulness, the grave consequences of infamy, and at the least ten years' imprisonment would certainly insure the truth of the speaker."

This is the true reason given for this exception to the hearsay rule. It is a statement made against the interest of the party making the confession, and Mr. Wigmore in his second volume on evidence, demonstrates that there should be no difference in receiving such confessions when it would subject the party to a criminal presecution, than when the admission would affect his property rights. Wigmore's Evidence, vol. 2, section 1476.

Here also will be found a history of this exception to the hearsay rule, and it will be noted that until 1844 in England, such confessions were always admitted. And that this doctrine was not changed until a case was tried in the House of Lords, which Mr. Wigmore says was not well argued or considered by the judges, and in which "a backward step was taken and an arbitrary limit put upon the rule." It was there held to apply only to statements made against the property interest of the party making it. This case has been followed by some of the courts and without reason as Mr. Wigmore clearly shows.

The case of Martin v. State, 26 S.W. 400 (Tex.), refused to follow this precedent and admitted the confession.

It is true that there are not many cases in which this point has been decided because it is seldom that such facts exist in a case. It is a question of first impression in this court.

Geo. T. Mitchell, for appellee.

While there are five assignments of error in the record, counsel, in their brief, have practically abandoned all of same except the third assignment of error, which is as follows:

"Because the court erred in excluding the testimony of O. T. Trapp and Norbin Jones, witnesses for the defendant, offered to prove the confession of Henry Brown, as shown by stenographer's notes." The proffered testimony as shown by the record was to the effect that Henry Brown, after the trial of the case in the justice of the peace court, after the habeas corpus trial before the chancellor, after one trial of the case in the circuit court, after the second trial of the case in the circuit court, and after an appeal to this court from the conviction of the lower court, came to the sheriff of the county, and surrendered himself, claiming that he, and not his brother, Albert, did the killing. Whereupon the sheriff confined him in jail, and kept him there until the next grand jury of the county convened, who investigated the matter, and placed so little credence in, and attached so little importance to the so called confession of Henry Brown, that they absolutely paid no attention to it and refused to indict him upon his own confession. He was thereupon released from custody by the sheriff and remained in the county until a short time before the next term of court, when, it seems, after all danger was over, and there was no prosecution against him, and no threatened prosecution, he decided to seek safety in the "tall and uncut timber." On the trial of the case in the court below defendant offered this testimony as going to show that Henry Brown and not Albert did the killing. The court, as we contend, very properly excluded the testimony on the ground that it was hearsay, and it is upon this point that appellant asks this court to grant him a new trial.

Practically the only authority submitted by counsel for appellant in support of their contention that this testimony was competent and should have gone to the jury is 2 Wigmore on Evidence, pars. 1476 and 1477, in which the learned author states that the great weight of authority is against the admissibility of such evidence, but that, in his opinion, it should be competent. In this position, he stands practically alone, and his views upon this question run counter to the unanimous holding of the courts of this county and also of England. 12 Cyc. 399, par. n., uses the following language:

"The cases are not harmonious as to the relevancy of evidence incriminating outsiders in the crime with which the accused stands charged. It has been held that he may show that another actually committed the crime, if the evidence incriminating the other is inconsistent with his own guilt, but it is not admissible to show that another person is or was suspected, or has been indicted for the crime." Brown v. State, 120 Ala. 342; Peoples v. Thompson, 33 N. Y. (App.Div.) 177; Ray v. State, 10 Yerg. (Tenn.) 258; Greenfield v. People, 85 N.Y. 75; Johnson v. State, 43 S.W. 1007; Taylor v. Com., 90 Va. 109.

The flight by the third person, his motive to commit the crime, his bad character, or even his confession of the crime, is irrelevant to exculpate the accused." Levison v. State, 54 Ala. 520; State v. Taylor, 136 Mo. 66; Bennett v. State, 56 Ala. 370; State v. Yandle, 166 Mo. 589.

In the same volume, 12 Cyc., at p. 434, par. 1, we find:

"The declarations of a person other than the accused, confessing that he committed the crime, are not competent for the accused, for although the latter may exculpate himself by proving, if he can, that some one with whom he was not connected, committed the crime with which he is charged, he cannot do so by hearsay; and this rule is not changed by the fact that the declarant is dead, or even by the fact that he confessed on his death bed." Welch v. State, 96 Ala. 92; Owensby v. State, 82 Ala. 63; Alston v State, 63 Ala. 178; Snow v. State, 58 Ala. 372; Snow v. State, 54 Ala. 138; Wolfolk v. State, 85 Ga. 69; Moughon v. State, 57 Ga. 102; State v. Smith, 36 Kan. 618; State v. West, 45 La. 928; State v. Hack, 118 Mo. 92; State v. Duncan, 116 Mo. 288; State v. Evans, 55 Mo. 460; State v. Levy, 90 Mo. 643; Peoples v. Schooley, 149 N.Y. 99; Greenfield v. People, 85 N.Y. 75; People v. Greenfield, 23 Hun, 454; State v. Gee, 92 N.C. 756; State v. Beverly, 88 N.C. 632; State v. Baxter, 82 N.C. 602; State v. White, 68 N.C. 158; State v. Duncan, 28 N.C. 236; State v. Fletcher, 24 Or. 295; Peck v. State, 86 Tenn. 259; Holt v. State, 9 Tex.App. 571; Horton v. State, 24 S.W. 28; U. S. v. McMayon, 4 Cranch C. C. 573; U. S. v. Miller, 4 Cranch C. C. 104; 14 Cen. Digest, par....

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  • Chambers v. Mississippi 8212 5908
    • United States
    • U.S. Supreme Court
    • February 21, 1973
    ...no such exception for declarations, like McDonald's in this case, that are against the penal interest of the declarant. Brown v. State, 99 Miss. 719, 55 So. 961 (1911). This materialistic limitation on the declaration-against-interest hearsay exception appears to be accepted by most States ......
  • U.S. v. Camacho
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    • October 1, 2001
    ...reliable nature of the out-of-court statements and the presence at trial of the declarant distinguished the case from Brown v. State, 99 Miss. 719, 55 So. 961 (1911), where the highest state court declined to admit evidence of an out-of-court confession out of a concern that the confession ......
  • State v. Arnold
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    • December 6, 2013
    ...the jury. The availability of McDonald significantly distinguishes this case from the prior Mississippi precedent, Brown v. State, [99 Miss. 719, 55 So. 961 (1911) ], supra, and from the Donnelly-type situation, since in both cases the declarant was unavailable at the time of trial. (Citati......
  • Foster v. State
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    ...the jury. The availability of McDonald significantly distinguishes this case from the prior Mississippi precedent, Brown v. State [99 Miss. 719, 55 So. 961 (1911) ],supra, and from the Donnelly-type [ v. United, 228 U.S. 243, 33 S.Ct. 449, 57 L.Ed. 820 (1913) ] situation, since in both case......
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